Authors
Issue Date
30-Nov-2021
Physical description
34 p.
Abstract
This paper analyses “banking-as-a-service” and “beyond banking”, two emerging
bank competition strategies. These business models are argued to emulate the
transaction-based inroads that BigTechs have made into finance. But they entail new
risks that call for adequate regulatory responses along a dual track. First, it is argued
that regulation of the disruptive competition model of BigTechs at the confluence of
finance and technology requires new tools to coordinate the different regulatory
policies involved (banking, payments, competition, data, digital) and a new approach
to the treatment of mixed business conglomerates that consolidate multiple business
lines and risks. Second, the reliance of “banking-as-a-service” on a quasi-renting-out
of the banking licence to non-financial companies as a way of obtaining a transactional
base poses moral hazard and model risks that require specific treatments not unlike
the originate-to-distribute business model did. The prospects for success of the pure
version of the “beyond banking” model, where banks become sponsors of full-fledged
platforms, are assessed as dim, but hybrid versions still entail new risks.
Notes
Artículo de revista
Publish on
Financial Stability Review / Banco de España, 41 (Autumn 2021), p. 105-138
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